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Lately, the energy sector has garnered the most momentum amongst 11 U.S. market sectors after rocketing 11.5% over the past 30 days; in comparison, the utilities sector has posted the second-highest gains after climbing 6.6% while the S&P 500 has notched 1.3% higher over the timeframe.
“It’s headlines, not fundamentals” that lifted WTI, Mizuho’s Robert Yawger says, adding the biggest impact by the Middle East conflict has, so far, been to raise the cost of transport and insurance for ships plying the Red Sea. However, he has conceded that the latest strike in Syria “just ticks that much closer to dragging Iranian production into the conflict. Despite a flurry of diplomatic activity meant to turn down the heat on the situation, there is definitely a chance the Iranians response will not be as measured this time,” Yawger says.
However, not all analysts think that the oil price rally is merely being driven by headlines and sentiment. Commodity analysts at Standard Chartered have predicted that oil fundamentals remain strong and oil prices are set to trade in the lower $90s. StanChart has pointed out that fundamentals in oil markets remain strong, leaving OPEC with ample room to increase output in Q3 without either causing inventories to rise or prices to weaken. Related: Oil Surges Over $90 as UAE Cuts Diplomatic Ties with Israel
According to StanChart, one of the remarkable features of this year’s oil price rally is that market bulls have largely been missing in action. StanChart notes that Wall Street remains guarded about the oil price outlook, with the analysts’ Q2 Brent forecast of USD 94/bbl currently the only forecast above USD 90/bbl among 34 Wall Street forecasts. Indeed, both the median and the mean of the Q2 Bloomberg consensus panel currently stand at USD 83/bbl, virtually unchanged from the beginning of the year despite the markets tightening considerably. StanChart notes that even erstwhile oil price bulls have relatively low Q2 price forecasts. The bearish price views would be justified if fundamentals were looking weak, inventories were high and/or’ OPEC policy appeared uncertain or if geopolitics appeared benign. However, StanChart points out that none of these conditions hold, with the exact opposite being true. StanChart concedes that this cautious approach may yet prove to be correct, but says that several months of tighter fundamental readings and a near USD 15/bbl YTD price rally could finally persuade the bulls to cross the aisle.
Further Oil Price Gains
The latest Petroleum Supply Monthly (PSM) data released by the EIA on 29 March puts the all-time record high for U.S. crude oil output at 13.295mb/d, which was the country’s average output in both November and December 2023. StanChart has, however, predicted that U.S. output will remain flat with the all-time high not likely to be surpassed until August 2024 and again in October.
StanChart reckons that the U.S. market swung into a deficit of over 1.7 mb/d in both February and March, with the seasonal recovery in demand offsetting the recovery in U.S. output from its January low. The commodity experts estimate there was a counter-seasonal Q1 inventory draw of 1.12 mb/d, which led to a significant tightening compared with the inventory build recorded in Q1-2023. StanChart attributes the ongoing oil price rally to the 3 mb/d relative improvement from Q1-2023, and sees further price gains coming in Q2-2024.
Thankfully for the bulls, a section of Wall Street is beginning to warm up to oil and gas stocks.
According to Citi, Energy (XLE) is now the most crowded U.S. quant factor, noting that the sector tends to underperform over the next one to six months when it becomes red-hot. However, not everybody is convinced by the energy sector’s huge momentum. Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley remains pessimistic about the U.S. stock market in general; however, MS has upgraded energy stocks to overweight from neutral, noting that energy companies have lagged the performance of oil, and the sector is favorably valued.
“Taking the Fed’s recent messaging into account and assuming it is less concerned about inflation or looser financial conditions, commodity-oriented cyclicals and energy, in particular, could be due for a catch-up,” they have said.
By Alex Kimani for Oilprice.com
For a second consecutive month, Saudi Arabia raised the price of Arab Light, its flagship grade selling in Asia, by more than expected.
Aramco set the official selling price (OSP) of Arab Light for Asia for May by $0.30 per barrel to a premium of $2.00 over the Oman/Dubai average, the benchmark off which Middle Eastern crude going to Asia is priced.
This is the second consecutive increase in the price of Saudi oil selling in Asia, after Aramco had raised in March the OSPs for Asian buyers for April, following the extension of the OPEC+ production cut agreement until the end of the first half of the year. The price for the country’s flagship Arab Light grade was raised by $0.20 per barrel over the Oman/Dubai average for April.
Now the increase for May is $0.30 per barrel, the upper end of refining sources’ expectations polled by Reuters earlier this week. The Reuters survey of five refining sources showed that they expected Arab Light crude prices for May to be hiked by between $0.20 and $0.30 per barrel over the Middle Eastern benchmark. A Bloomberg survey of traders and refiners expected an increase of $0.10 per barrel.
Middle Eastern crude benchmarks have rallied in recent days, along with the increase in the entire crude complex as Brent prices topped $90 per barrel this week amid a tightening market and geopolitical concerns in the Middle East.
Saudi Arabia typically announces around the fifth of each month its crude pricing for the following month and doesn’t comment on price changes. This week, the OSPs came after the OPEC+ group’s Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee (JMMC) did not recommend any changes to output policy at its meeting on Wednesday.
By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com
Early on Friday morning, Brent was trading above $91 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate was closing in on $87 per barrel. The rally came amid reports that Russia may have temporarily lost as much as 15% of its refining capacity because of Ukrainian drone attacks and Iran vowed to exact revenge on Israel for the strike of its consulate in Damascus.
“Oil prices look set for further upside in the short term as a more positive economic backdrop is joined by ongoing supply tightness and rising geopolitical risks,” analysts from ANZ said, as quoted by Reuters, revising their three-month price forecast for Brent crude to $95 per barrel.
The wider Mideast tensions stemming from the Gaza war are probably at the highest in months,” Vandana Hari, founder of Vanda Insights, told Bloomberg. “Crude is reflecting that Mideast conflagration fear premium.”
The latest from the Middle East is the news that the UAE is growing cold to Israel after several years of normalized relations. The reason for the change in attitude was the Israeli strike that killed seven aid workers in Gaza. Some reports said the Emirates were “outraged” with the event.
Demand for oil, meanwhile, remains quite healthy, with the latest U.S. weekly inventory report revealing declines in both gasoline and middle distillate stocks. This demand is set to rise further, especially in middle distillates as the manufacturing industry in the country gathers momentum, Reuters’ market analyst John Kemp wrote in a recent column.
While this is happening, OPEC+ reaffirmed its commitment to production limits at its latest meeting earlier this week. Even though there were overproducers again, prices rose after the meeting because the group signaled it was about to get those overproducers in line, demanding compensation for their excess production.
By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com
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When speaking about arabica coffee, Citi analyst Aakash Doshi noted that prices may increase in both the short term and the long term. This has the firm providing a coffee price forecast of $1.88 per pound to $2.15 per pound for 2024.
Doshi said the following about this 2024 coffee price forecast in a note to clients obtained by CNBC:
“The current move can largely be attributed to a heat wave in Vietnam affecting Robusta coffee production and as a result, providing carryover support for premium Arabica beans.”
Other factors are also weighing on the price of coffee recently. That includes more consumers choosing it as a natural source of energy in the morning. This comes amid a movement of customers seeking out more organic options for their food and drink.
If that demand continues to increase, it could also cause the price of coffee to rise further. That’s something commodity traders will want to keep in mind for 2024.
Coffee isn’t the only commodity that is seeing stark price increases recently. Cocoa is also undergoing a rally lately. You can learn more about that here.
Investors looking for more of the most recent stock market news will want to keep reading!
We have all of the hottest market news ready to go on Thursday! Among that is what’s happening with shares of Costco (NASDAQ:COST), Nikola (NASDAQ:NKLA) and Canopy Growth (NASDAQ:CGC) stock today. You can catch up on all of this below!
On the date of publication, William White did not have (either directly or indirectly) any positions in the securities mentioned in this article. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the writer, subject to the InvestorPlace.com Publishing Guidelines.
Article printed from InvestorPlace Media, https://investorplace.com/2024/04/coffee-price-forecast-2024-how-much-higher-will-record-coffee-prices-go/.
©2024 InvestorPlace Media, LLC
-US unemployment claims increased by more than expected in the last week, according to Labor Department statistics, as labor market conditions gradually ease. This came after US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell expressed caution on Wednesday about the timing of future interest rate cuts, after recent data has showed higher-than-expected job growth and inflation.
Tensions escalated in the region after the Israeli air strike on the Iranian embassy killed its top officials. Russian supply is already tight due to OPEC+ output compliance and supply concerns from oil refineries after last month’s Ukrainian attack, according to analysts
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Oil And Natural Gas Corporation ended the previous trading day at a closing price of Rs 275.35, with a 6-month beta of 1.02, indicating a slightly higher volatility compared to the market.
Oil And Natural Gas Corporation saw a decrease in its stock price, closing at Rs 275.35 yesterday, with a one-month return of -3.65%. Investors are closely monitoring the company’s performance amidst market fluctuations.
Oil And Natural Gas Corporation closed at Rs 275.35 yesterday with a trading volume of 24,624,383 shares, surpassing the average 7-day volume of 15,592,348 shares.
08:41:18 AM IST, 05 April 2024
Oil And Natural Gas Corporation ended the previous day at a closing price of Rs 275.35, with a remarkable 3-month return of 25.32%. The company’s stock has shown strong performance over the past quarter, outperforming market expectations.
08:33:41 AM IST, 05 April 2024
Oil And Natural Gas Corporation ended the previous trading day at a closing price of Rs 275.35, marking a decrease of 2.31% from the day before. The trading volume for the day stood at 22,60,0929 units.
Recap for April 2
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Unless you’ve been living under a rock, it won’t have escaped your notice that gold is doing rather well.
But why is gold still rising?
The wars in Ukraine and Gaza continue and the potential escalation to other countries keeps hanging over the markets like the sword of Damocles.
Investors and governments are all too wary of another fallout akin to when Vladimir Putin first invaded Ukraine two years ago and gold is one of the most effective hedges against these concerns.
Data from BullionVault, the world’s largest online precious metal marketplace, shows that Western investors banked record profits from selling gold in March, offloading almost twice the amount purchased.
“Previous peaks in the number of people selling gold also came as bullion prices jumped, ” says BullionVault director of research Adrian Ash.
“But they all coincided with moments of acute political or financial stress, spurring stronger investor demand.”
Indeed sellers through the platform rose 95 per cent to beat the number recorded during the English riots and Euro debt crisis of 2011, March 2022 when Russia invaded Ukraine and the Brexit referendum shock in June 2016.
In contrast, gold’s new all-time highs have grown exponentially as the general unease around global conflicts has continued.
That, Ash says, “speaks to the underlying strength of this price uptrend”.
Strong physical demand from central banks and retail investors in Asia is also supporting the yellow metal. However, demand is expected to fall in the short term as investors baulk at higher prices.
Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy for Saxo, said that the prospect for lower funding costs may finally see demand for bullion-backed, exchange-traded funds (ETFs) from real money asset managers pick up for the first time since 2022.
And though the buying rate is slowing, the world’s central banks are still stockpiling gold where they can.
Figures from the World Gold Council show that reported global central bank gold reserves for February rose by 19 tonnes.
Despite this being the ninth consecutive month of growth, the data show a slowdown, with buying for the month 58 per cent lower than January’s.
On a year-to-date basis, central banks report the addition of 64 tonnes over January and February, 43 per cent lower than the same period in 2023 but a fourfold increase on 2022.
Gold rallies are frequently built around when inflation looks to be on an upward curve, depreciating the value of currency.
An update on Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s policy outlook, due this week, will be an important driver for stocks and commodities this week, however.
The Fed is not cutting rates until June at the earliest and year-on-year inflation is sitting at 2.5 per cent on the back of a burgeoning economy.
The resulting strength of the US dollar is complicating matters further for gold future-gazers.
The currency has just tipped over a four month high, adding pressure to the gold market and muddying the landscape for those with bullion exposure.
Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB Trading, points out that gold might have reached its ceiling, short of a course-correction event such as further geopolitical escalation and could be due a correction.
“Open interest on gold contracts appears to have peaked and the gold price is now 15 per cent above its 200-day simple moving average (SMA),” she said.
“This suggests that it is at extreme levels and could be due a pullback.”
By CityAM
Oil prices hit their highest level since October as tensions in the Middle East escalated, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying that Israel will take an aggressive stance against Iran and its proxies.
“Those who harm us or plan to harm us, we will harm,” he said at a security cabinet meeting.
Brent crude, the international…
“Those who harm us or plan to harm us, we will harm,” he said at a security cabinet meeting.
the international benchmark, rose 1.5% to $90.65 per barrel. A widening Israel-Hamas war would endanger supplies of oil. Iran is one of the largest oil producers in the Middle East.
are up 18% this year because of the war, OPEC’s decision to cut production, and rising fuel demand.
The U.S.-Israel alliance may also be shifting. President Joe Biden told Netanyahu in a Thursday call that the U.S. needs Israel “to announce and implement a series of specific, concrete, and measurable steps to address civilian harm, humanitarian suffering, and the safety of aid workers,” according to the White House.
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“It feels like the most likely path in the Middle East is for continued escalation in the Arab-Israeli conflict, and we think oil prices have the potential to go even higher in the near-term despite the recent strength if the current bellicose momentum continues,” wrote Roth MKM analyst Leo Mariani.
Oil stocks fell late in the day, despite the rally in crude prices. The
Energy Select Sector SPDR fund
ended the day marginally lower, after hitting a record earlier. The stocks were reacting to a broad market selloff.
Write to Avi Salzman at avi.salzman@barrons.com